github.com/nf/docker@v1.8.1/docs/project/test-and-docs.md (about) 1 <!--[metadata]> 2 +++ 3 title = "Run tests and test documentation" 4 description = "Describes Docker's testing infrastructure" 5 keywords = ["make test, make docs, Go tests, gofmt, contributing, running tests"] 6 [menu.main] 7 parent = "smn_develop" 8 weight=6 9 +++ 10 <![end-metadata]--> 11 12 # Run tests and test documentation 13 14 Contributing includes testing your changes. If you change the Docker code, you 15 may need to add a new test or modify an existing one. Your contribution could 16 even be adding tests to Docker. For this reason, you need to know a little 17 about Docker's test infrastructure. 18 19 Many contributors contribute documentation only. Or, a contributor makes a code 20 contribution that changes how Docker behaves and that change needs 21 documentation. For these reasons, you also need to know how to build, view, and 22 test the Docker documentation. 23 24 In this section, you run tests in the `dry-run-test` branch of your Docker 25 fork. If you have followed along in this guide, you already have this branch. 26 If you don't have this branch, you can create it or simply use another of your 27 branches. 28 29 ## Understand testing at Docker 30 31 Docker tests use the Go language's test framework. In this framework, files 32 whose names end in `_test.go` contain test code; you'll find test files like 33 this throughout the Docker repo. Use these files for inspiration when writing 34 your own tests. For information on Go's test framework, see <a 35 href="http://golang.org/pkg/testing/" target="_blank">Go's testing package 36 documentation</a> and the <a href="http://golang.org/cmd/go/#hdr-Test_packages" 37 target="_blank">go test help</a>. 38 39 You are responsible for _unit testing_ your contribution when you add new or 40 change existing Docker code. A unit test is a piece of code that invokes a 41 single, small piece of code ( _unit of work_ ) to verify the unit works as 42 expected. 43 44 Depending on your contribution, you may need to add _integration tests_. These 45 are tests that combine two or more work units into one component. These work 46 units each have unit tests and then, together, integration tests that test the 47 interface between the components. The `integration` and `integration-cli` 48 directories in the Docker repository contain integration test code. 49 50 Testing is its own specialty. If you aren't familiar with testing techniques, 51 there is a lot of information available to you on the Web. For now, you should 52 understand that, the Docker maintainers may ask you to write a new test or 53 change an existing one. 54 55 ### Run tests on your local host 56 57 Before submitting any code change, you should run the entire Docker test suite. 58 The `Makefile` contains a target for the entire test suite. The target's name 59 is simply `test`. The make file contains several targets for testing: 60 61 <style type="text/css"> 62 .monospaced {font-family: Monaco, Consolas, "Lucida Console", monospace !important;} 63 </style> 64 <table> 65 <tr> 66 <th>Target</th> 67 <th>What this target does</th> 68 </tr> 69 <tr> 70 <td class="monospaced">test</td> 71 <td>Run all the tests.</td> 72 </tr> 73 <tr> 74 <td class="monospaced">test-unit</td> 75 <td>Run just the unit tests.</td> 76 </tr> 77 <tr> 78 <td class="monospaced">test-integration-cli</td> 79 <td>Run the test for the integration command line interface.</td> 80 </tr> 81 <tr> 82 <td class="monospaced">test-docker-py</td> 83 <td>Run the tests for Docker API client.</td> 84 </tr> 85 <tr> 86 <td class="monospaced">docs-test</td> 87 <td>Runs the documentation test build.</td> 88 </tr> 89 </table> 90 91 Run the entire test suite on your current repository: 92 93 1. Open a terminal on your local host. 94 95 2. Change to the root your Docker repository. 96 97 $ cd docker-fork 98 99 3. Make sure you are in your development branch. 100 101 $ git checkout dry-run-test 102 103 4. Run the `make test` command. 104 105 $ make test 106 107 This command does several things, it creates a container temporarily for 108 testing. Inside that container, the `make`: 109 110 * creates a new binary 111 * cross-compiles all the binaries for the various operating systems 112 * runs all the tests in the system 113 114 It can take several minutes to run all the tests. When they complete 115 successfully, you see the output concludes with something like this: 116 117 118 [PASSED]: top - sleep process should be listed in privileged mode 119 [PASSED]: version - verify that it works and that the output is properly formatted 120 PASS 121 coverage: 70.8% of statements 122 ---> Making bundle: test-docker-py (in bundles/1.5.0-dev/test-docker-py) 123 +++ exec docker daemon --debug --host unix:///go/src/github.com/docker/docker/bundles/1.5.0-dev/test-docker-py/docker.sock --storage-driver vfs --exec-driver native --pidfile /go/src/github.com/docker/docker/bundles/1.5.0-dev/test-docker-py/docker.pid 124 ................................................................. 125 ---------------------------------------------------------------------- 126 Ran 65 tests in 89.266s 127 128 129 ### Run test targets inside the development container 130 131 If you are working inside a Docker development container, you use the 132 `hack/make.sh` script to run tests. The `hack/make.sh` script doesn't 133 have a single target that runs all the tests. Instead, you provide a single 134 command line with multiple targets that does the same thing. 135 136 Try this now. 137 138 1. Open a terminal and change to the `docker-fork` root. 139 140 2. Start a Docker development image. 141 142 If you are following along with this guide, you should have a 143 `dry-run-test` image. 144 145 $ docker run --privileged --rm -ti -v `pwd`:/go/src/github.com/docker/docker dry-run-test /bin/bash 146 147 3. Run the tests using the `hack/make.sh` script. 148 149 root@5f8630b873fe:/go/src/github.com/docker/docker# hack/make.sh dynbinary binary cross test-unit test-integration-cli test-docker-py 150 151 The tests run just as they did within your local host. 152 153 154 Of course, you can also run a subset of these targets too. For example, to run 155 just the unit tests: 156 157 root@5f8630b873fe:/go/src/github.com/docker/docker# hack/make.sh dynbinary binary cross test-unit 158 159 Most test targets require that you build these precursor targets first: 160 `dynbinary binary cross` 161 162 163 ## Running individual or multiple named tests 164 165 We use [gocheck](https://labix.org/gocheck) for our integration-cli tests. 166 You can use the `TESTFLAGS` environment variable to run a single test. The 167 flag's value is passed as arguments to the `go test` command. For example, from 168 your local host you can run the `TestBuild` test with this command: 169 170 $ TESTFLAGS='-check.f DockerSuite.TestBuild*' make test-integration-cli 171 172 To run the same test inside your Docker development container, you do this: 173 174 root@5f8630b873fe:/go/src/github.com/docker/docker# TESTFLAGS='-check.f TestBuild*' hack/make.sh binary test-integration-cli 175 176 ## If tests under Boot2Docker fail due to disk space errors 177 178 Running the tests requires about 2GB of memory. If you are running your 179 container on bare metal, that is you are not running with Boot2Docker, your 180 Docker development container is able to take the memory it requires directly 181 from your local host. 182 183 If you are running Docker using Boot2Docker, the VM uses 2048MB by default. 184 This means you can exceed the memory of your VM running tests in a Boot2Docker 185 environment. When the test suite runs out of memory, it returns errors similar 186 to the following: 187 188 server.go:1302 Error: Insertion failed because database is full: database or 189 disk is full 190 191 utils_test.go:179: Error copy: exit status 1 (cp: writing 192 '/tmp/docker-testd5c9-[...]': No space left on device 193 194 To increase the memory on your VM, you need to reinitialize the Boot2Docker VM 195 with new memory settings. 196 197 1. Stop all running containers. 198 199 2. View the current memory setting. 200 201 $ boot2docker info 202 { 203 "Name": "boot2docker-vm", 204 "UUID": "491736fd-4075-4be7-a6f5-1d4cdcf2cc74", 205 "Iso": "/Users/mary/.boot2docker/boot2docker.iso", 206 "State": "running", 207 "CPUs": 8, 208 "Memory": 2048, 209 "VRAM": 8, 210 "CfgFile": "/Users/mary/VirtualBox VMs/boot2docker-vm/boot2docker-vm.vbox", 211 "BaseFolder": "/Users/mary/VirtualBox VMs/boot2docker-vm", 212 "OSType": "", 213 "Flag": 0, 214 "BootOrder": null, 215 "DockerPort": 0, 216 "SSHPort": 2022, 217 "SerialFile": "/Users/mary/.boot2docker/boot2docker-vm.sock" 218 } 219 220 221 3. Delete your existing `boot2docker` profile. 222 223 $ boot2docker delete 224 225 4. Reinitialize `boot2docker` and specify a higher memory. 226 227 $ boot2docker init -m 5555 228 229 5. Verify the memory was reset. 230 231 $ boot2docker info 232 233 6. Restart your container and try your test again. 234 235 236 ## Testing just the Windows client 237 238 This explains how to test the Windows client on a Windows server set up as a 239 development environment. You'll use the **Git Bash** came with the Git for 240 Windows installation. **Git Bash** just as it sounds allows you to run a Bash 241 terminal on Windows. 242 243 1. If you don't have one, start a Git Bash terminal. 244 245 ![Git Bash](/project/images/git_bash.png) 246 247 2. Change to the `docker` source directory. 248 249 $ cd /c/gopath/src/github.com/docker/docker 250 251 3. Set `DOCKER_CLIENTONLY` as follows: 252 253 $ export DOCKER_CLIENTONLY=1 254 255 This ensures you are building only the client binary instead of both the 256 binary and the daemon. 257 258 4. Set `DOCKER_TEST_HOST` to the `tcp://IP_ADDRESS:2376` value; substitute your 259 machine's actual IP address, for example: 260 261 $ export DOCKER_TEST_HOST=tcp://263.124.23.200:2376 262 263 5. Make the binary and the test: 264 265 $ hack/make.sh binary test-integration-cli 266 267 Many tests are skipped on Windows for various reasons. You see which tests 268 were skipped by re-running the make and passing in the 269 `TESTFLAGS='-test.v'` value. 270 271 272 You can now choose to make changes to the Docker source or the tests. If you 273 make any changes just run these commands again. 274 275 276 ## Build and test the documentation 277 278 The Docker documentation source files are under `docs`. The content is 279 written using extended Markdown. We use the static generator <a 280 href="http://www.mkdocs.org/" target="_blank">MkDocs</a> to build Docker's 281 documentation. Of course, you don't need to install this generator 282 to build the documentation, it is included with container. 283 284 You should always check your documentation for grammar and spelling. The best 285 way to do this is with <a href="http://www.hemingwayapp.com/" 286 target="_blank">an online grammar checker</a>. 287 288 When you change a documentation source file, you should test your change 289 locally to make sure your content is there and any links work correctly. You 290 can build the documentation from the local host. The build starts a container 291 and loads the documentation into a server. As long as this container runs, you 292 can browse the docs. 293 294 1. In a terminal, change to the root of your `docker-fork` repository. 295 296 $ cd ~/repos/docker-fork 297 298 2. Make sure you are in your feature branch. 299 300 $ git status 301 On branch dry-run-test 302 Your branch is up-to-date with 'origin/dry-run-test'. 303 nothing to commit, working directory clean 304 305 3. Build the documentation. 306 307 $ make docs 308 309 When the build completes, you'll see a final output message similar to the 310 following: 311 312 Successfully built ee7fe7553123 313 docker run --rm -it -e AWS_S3_BUCKET -e NOCACHE -p 8000:8000 "docker-docs:dry-run-test" mkdocs serve 314 Running at: http://0.0.0.0:8000/ 315 Live reload enabled. 316 Hold ctrl+c to quit. 317 318 4. Enter the URL in your browser. 319 320 If you are using Docker Machine, replace the default localhost address 321 (0.0.0.0) with your DOCKERHOST value. You can get this value at any time by 322 entering `docker-machine ip <machine-name>` at the command line. 323 324 5. Once in the documentation, look for the red notice to verify you are seeing the correct build. 325 326 ![Beta documentation](/project/images/red_notice.png) 327 328 6. Navigate to your new or changed document. 329 330 7. Review both the content and the links. 331 332 8. Return to your terminal and exit out of the running documentation container. 333 334 335 ## Where to go next 336 337 Congratulations, you have successfully completed the basics you need to 338 understand the Docker test framework. In the next steps, you use what you have 339 learned so far to [contribute to Docker by working on an 340 issue](/project/make-a-contribution/).